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SKATE SHARPENING—Satisfaction Guaranteed 
Bvery Customer a Satisfied Customer 


V. Hutchinson, Irma 


i it 
As the demand for building materia]S increases and the vas 
amount of lumber that is being sent it becomes more and 
more our duty to watch our supplies so t our customers can 
buy with confidence and Satisfaction. Let us quote you soa 
whatever your needs may be, and avail yourself of the service 
that we freely offer. Your satisfaction will be our pleasure. 


WE ARE HERE TO SERVE YOU 


. Ltd. 
The Imperitlaune Ae 


| TRAVEL BY BUS 


WEEK-END EXCURSIONS ON ALL LINES 


Leave Irma daily, going Wett.................... 
Leave Irma daily, going.East ...................8:10 p.m. 


Charter a bus for your next trip. Find the 
_ lew cost and added pleasure 


GET MORE FOR YOUR TRAVEL DOLLAR 


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Alberta Pacific Elevators participate in 
maintainimg an Agricultural Department 
designed to essist farmers in 
combatting soil erosion; identifying 
and controlling weeds; seed graim 
selection and meeting various 

problems of crop production. 
Our Agent will obtain any com- 
petent information you may desire. 


ALBERTA PACIFIC GRAIN 
COMPAINY, LIMITED @s) 


Wse Wravellei 


ROVAL GEORGE! 


HOT E i 


arma, a, 

Irma Observes Wedding | 

[Remembrance Day | , roves smo, | 
—— at Sharon Church, on Sunday, Nov.| it seems fitting 


The usual memorial service W&8|10th at 2:80 PIM., when Grace Helen,| Britain and the 


held in Irma on Remembrance Day, youngest daughter of Mrs. Lindquist} standing side by 

Nov. 11th at 10:45 AM. The sefiand the late Briand Lindquist of|mocracy againgt 

Vice this year was held in the United | Jarrow was united in marriage to) Democracy, or 

Church and conducted by Rev. B.|ewrence Nathan, youngest son of| freedom ai be 

Longmire assisted by the girls’|/Mr. and Mra. N. L. Fuder of Irma.|the individual citizen is superior to : ;' 

choir. The attendance of ex-service) The bride who entered the church|the State, and shall not be merely} Passchendsle—Public worship 11:15 

men was not large owing to sub-zero|on the arm of her brother Werner,/the pawn of a monarch of a dictator,| Roseberry—Gunday school 3 p.m 

temperature. was lovely in an afternoon frock of|was first invented by Golon the Public worship 4 p.m 

The response of the Irma Signal/rosewood crepe with many accesso-|Greek in the year 504 B.C. and was ; 

Corps to the request thet they joiN|ries. She carried a bouquet of pink | actually put into practice as a system VETERANS’ 

the parade was good. They With! roses and white The| af government fn (Athens—with a VOLUNTEER RESERVE 
mbers 


of the V.VR. marched) bridesmaid Winnie Jacobs, niece 

from the Legion hall to the churth|the bride was charming in a year to de-| Will be no parade of the Irma Platoon 

under the command of R. C. MeFar-| of powder blue and black with match-' sign laws and to govern the country | of the V.VR. this Sunday. Notice 

In spite ing accessories. , —in 508 BX. lof the next parade will be posted. 
Roy Fuder, brother of the groom| This system of Democracy was e-| R. C. McFarland, : 
the service was fairly good. Mr.) acted as best man. Unit Commander, 

Longmire delivered a very fine me-| Viking officiated. Mrs. M. Reitan|Bnglish won it back for the common | V.VR. Irma. Platoon. 

morial address which was greatly ap-|presided at the organ and Sigurd|people when King John was obliged | ; 

preciated by the vets as was also the | Fluevog sang a solo, ‘Oh Perfect Love’|to sign the great Magna Carta at, CANADIAN LEGION 

services of the girl’s choir led by; A reception was held in the evening | Ruatyinede on June 15th, 1215. Owing to the severe weather the 

Miss Lois Longmire. at the brides home for about 70 of| Today these dearly won rights! 4nnual meeting of the Irma branch 
i| ‘The two minutes silence in honor her friends and relatives. The liv-| and liberties are again in danger,|of the Canadian Legion, No. 112, to 
of ‘those who gave their lives in the ing room was prettily decorated with| and it seems more than a mere co-|¥¢ held November 11th, was post- 
great struggle was observed. | white streamers and a large white |\incidence that the Greeks, who orj- | Poned. The annual meeting date will 

Com. R. H. Stone acted as bug- bell. The table was centered by 4! ginally discovered democracy and put | be announced at a later date which 
ler for the occasion and sounded three-tiered wedding cake trimmed it practically to work, and the English | Vill be in the form of a get-together, 
the Last Post and Reveille. |in white and silver. The bridal cou-' who restored it jto the world should, Chas. Wilbraham, Secretary, us 

The returns from the sale of Pop: | ple were the recipients of many lov: | be fighting side by side to maintain | Irma Branch, No. 112, BES.1L. 
pies this year amounted to $15.00.'}y and useful gifts. those precious rights of the \ 

The Legion members are very; They will make their home ‘on| and fighting moreover on the same | pED CROSS NOTES 
grateful for the support given them /their farm south of Jarrow. |Gewelan sell end eone Where demcera-| eo enanl necting of the tran 
a cy was won originally ‘by the Greeks ranch of the Canadian Red Cross 

An enjoyable evening was spent at/in 594 B.C., or 2,448 years ago. | Soeiety will te held in the Legion 
f- 42-4 ae : Pee a 
Helen Pendleton gave a shower ‘in| URGE COMPLETION OF — ro aA sae & OF 
honor ‘of Helen Lindquist bride to|TRANS-CANADA Meigs 


‘be. The evening was spent in sing- ‘TWELVE TON LOAD 


: : .,.,/ing and games and the presentation 
wtements, from. the shipper or|%,*, Miniature house filled -with| Completion tf he ‘Teana¥-bneda| Pryce Jones, Pool elevator afgent 
highway at an early date is essen- at Inma has reported the delivery by 


is 
1 
! 
Fa 


HOG CARCASS GRADING 
STATMENT AVAILABLE 
TO EVERY PRODUCER 


statements, from the shipper or). tel 
Gutine, covertig. tags which tag |” te! eO. 
have sold showing:— . 
1, The official] carcass grade. A eteenined: ‘a due a. 
~ oe se weight. a ©. Johnson (nee Ann Walker) was cal 
3. —— per pound for the ba- held in the Roseberry school on Nov.  - oo ie 
4 ‘jin deff routtels ‘for. th 1ith. Mrs. Johnson received a lot ‘Por: years the (Alberta Motor As- largest single load of a. ‘ pe Ya 

: r the Ve" | of lovely gifts from friends through-| sociation has gi | wheat 


rious grades. | ; . ‘ 
5. Any ah ok _| out the district. The evening WAS \to the campaign to bring about. the 


portation and commission. AF sai S dame. dh sony. calepaenel iid thet this 


SHOWER 


of 
2 
= 
3 
$ 


issues a statement showing the grade/.s Gason Alberta. military ; 
— Hon. W. A. Pallow, minister of pu-|| for cold weather driving 

blic works for Alberta, who attended : 

the convention, declared upon his re- We have . 

| (‘A wedding of local intrest took | turn that the association had favor- ZERO OILS  GREASES 


|place in Edmonton on November 2,/ed adoption of a five-year plan to PRES 
when Miss Katie Stecyk was united) finish the road. 


Mod: commission firms and pack- 
ing houss are now issuing individual 
statements of settlement for every 
farmer's lot of hogs. 


these ‘are mailed direct to farmers:|in marriage with Mr. \A. Schmalnit-| This meant that the whole project|| ANTI 
| j i j es 5! : . 
over to the shipper or trucker, and it|°*i Mrs. Steve Bilo of Kinsella, st-/could be edvanced and completed on|I Car repairi special 


/ tended the wedding. a coordination basis, instead of hap- 
to in Gls seepemeitilty to css that | Mr. “Rusty” Oakes has joined the! hazard building of different stretches 
Oe GR SS Geen cme, FUCIA.F. and is now @tationed @t/or links in the chain 
and are not discarded as sometimes ° \ . P 


se et Bae ate ris: te al are you baer, ie 
<.k aee spent the week end at home. is still a streteh in northern Ontario "BEFORE ey oie 
1. Identify the ‘hogs. a ioe — “a rh gh ef me ies ins ’ 
8. aaron ee a Mr. Joe. Harasym who is working | early completion of this national|| . John N) Gar age 
qusting jpwnership identaai- |" the CNR. is s-ending @ month /road, a project in which all Alberta Irma, Alta. 


cation. : 

| ‘The Kinsella Red (Cross will hold a 

8. Issue to the farmer @ statement | dance in the hl] Friday, Novembe: | 
as outlined above. ' 


| 15th. 
4. Make settlement to the farmer . 
me offical gred ; Mrs. Lanéaster and Miss Irene Lan- | 


. : ,. ;. caster Have returned from a six weeks 
It is very much in the farmer's in- | nohiday in Ontast. 


terest to see that whoever delivers 
the hogs to the market meets all these | Mr. J. Bawden and daughter, Mes. | 


motorists will be interested. 


Have. Your Seed Tested 
* Thousands of farmers have avoided losses, and 
so have made extra money, by having their 


J. MoKie, have moved into Kinsella 
requirements. ; te lee, | seed and crops tested. Untold thousands are 
Most shippers or truckers are effi-| Mise. €. Qelile spent the wesk end still money because their c contain 
cient and trustworthy, but it is|. undesi mixtures. The test i 
in Edmonton. | ; is simple and 


known that some are disposed to mis- 
represent the official carcass grading 
service to the farmers. 


Four carloads of V.V.R. members) is free to the farmer. 


attended the Armistice service in) 
Viking on Monday, November 11th. 


BIRTHS 
Born ‘to ‘Mr. and Mrs. Ernest Rae 
of Irma at the Viking Hospital on 


See the nearest Searle Agent for particulars. 


e . ; 
SEARLE GRAIN COMPANY LTD, 


which will operate to the pro- 
benefit #f he will only take 


UnenenvER CASH 
AUCTION SALE 
On the N.E. 24-46-9 W. of 4th 


7% Miles Northeast of Irma, 1 mile south of Alma Mater school 


Irma, at the maternity Home, 


the wml where the were Edgerton, on Nov. 10th a son. 


. ~ — 
Woman Legal Right 
Now On Legal Staff Of The Depart- 

,* ment Of Justice 

Henriette Bourque, 
“really studied law as training for 
the mind and its cultural value,” is 

|now showing the department of jus- 
| tice legal staff that a woman can 
be a good lawyer. 


THAT'S EASY | good demonstration of her 
, ‘ }| She» -headzto if she wanted to get her) 
| She was the only woman among 15 
|or 20 applicants for the position 
|and she won out on the sole ground! 
‘that her qualifications were the best. | 
| It was touch and go for a while 
whether Miss Bourque would be a} 
lawyer or a concert pianist. She 
reached the cross-road after gradua- 
tion from the University of Ottawa. 
Finally she enrolled at the law 
school at the University of Montreal. 

Only girl in the class, both she and 
the men were uncomfortable at first. 
| She got over it; they became more 
uncomfortable than ever when she 
outstripped them all. Every year she 
topped the examination list and her 
male opponents had to admit this 
slim, dark-eyed girl had a pleasing 
personality as well. 

Finally Miss Bourque graduated 
with the highest honors, and prizes 
for Roman law, civil and severak other 


-BIG BEN! 


The PERFECT Chewing Jobacco 


Trickery, Treachery, Terrorism 


By this time ‘the causes of the war in which we dre presently engaged 
and the issues involved should be reasonably well clarified, sufficiently to 
enable us to determine why we are fighting, what the objective is and the 
degree of intensity necessary to ensure ultimate victory 

Not much time nor space need be devoted to the causes of the greatest 


and most-widely destructive conflict that the world has ever known. A varieties. She entered the firm of 
madman has run amok in. Europe, and after dazzling his own people with Beaulieu and Gouin at Montreal. 
specious promises that they are to become the dominant entity in a “new However, under Quebec law she 


world order,” has set out to conquer the world. It was a pre-determined 
program. By tricks, treachery and terrorism, he first enslaved his own | 
people who, at first, willingly surrendered .their liberties on the false promise 
that by so doing they should bend others to their bidding. This accomplished, 
the German people, at Hitler's behest, by trickery, treachery and terrorism, 
backed by the machine gun and the bomb, have succeeded in over-running 
the greater part of continental Europe and have enslaved millions of liberty- justice department job, and go it. 
loving people. Miss Bourque is the daughter of 
The tide was running strongly in Hitler’s favor and it appeared as if Dr. E. Bourque, Ottawa. Her father 
his ultimate objective—world domination—might be within his grasp, until Says she got her first training for 
hte made his abortive attempt to enslave the British people by the direct her profession in arguments with her 
route of invasion of British soil. Hitler realizes that his dream of world or two brothers and four sisters over bil- 


couldn't call herself a lawyer in that 
province (she still can't) so -she 
made application and was accepted 
to the bar of British Columbia. That 
gave her:the right to practice in 
federal courts. She applied for the 


even of partial world domination is now impossible until Britain has been liards. She still plays the game, and yyen the war is done. 

routed. He has turned aside for the time being and is attempting to’iS a keen naturalist as well, usually Argentina attempted to lighten the 

achieve this objective in other directions and indirectly, again by the em- spending her weekends with a num- | purden of its uninvited guests by| 

ployment of those weapons of which he has proved himself a past master” ber of nature loving friends. hiking gpreading the sailors through interior | 

trickery, treachery and terrorism. through Ontario woods. provinces in small groups, hoping the! making a remarkable 
° 8.8 Of her work at Ottawa, Miss | 


| Bourque says little, but she seems to 
| like it. In the legal department, it's 
her opinion that counts, not her sex 

“Any prejudice there might have 
been 25 years ago against a woman 
lawyer has disappeared,"” she 


A Simple Issue 


As for the issues in this gigantic conflict, they can be reduced to-a 
single simple statement. It is this: Is the world to be allowed to revert 
to the savagery and barbarism of the dark ages or, are the peoples of the 
world to be allowed to continue to emerge into the broad light of a bene- 
ficent, all-embracing civilization, towards which they have been struggling 
upwerd and onward for’a thousand years? 

If the doctrine of Naziism is to be allowed universal sway, it simply SELECTED RECIPES 
means that the world is to be engulfed in all the brutalities and tyrannies | : 
that held sway throughout the dark ages of history. It means the loss of ATS COSES SS Lae | 
all personal liberties for the rank and file of humanity. It will be left 3 cups peeled and cut cooking 


says. 


to arrogant dictators to say what sha y y :w apples 
- 4 = yw shall be worshipped, how and when; diana 2 tablespoons butter 
views may expressed on all or any subjects and by whom and when; :, cup water 


3 
what shal] be listened to and what shall not be heard. Farmers will be told) 15 Christie's Graham Wafers 
what to produce and how much of it. Business men will be told what they 2 teaspons baking powder 
may sell and people what they may buy. Women wil] be told whom they | Tore: mtiacioeag 
; fal | 2 tablespoons sugar 

may marry and how many children they shall bear. People will even be told! 1 egg 
what they may eat and what they may not eat. Education will be emascu- % cup milk 
lated and opportunity for the individual abrogated. | 4g cup chopped nut meats 

And woe betide the individual who offends the slavish code in which Fill greased baking dish half full 
he will. become enmeshed. A murmur against his hard lot will spell tor-| 0% @PPles. Dot with butter and add 
ture and imprisonment. Death will lurk. around the corner for him who oad ore inardiants” ties hats aes 
dares to breathe a word against his despotic masters. tisture 
kick against the pricks. 


It will be too late to | with milk and stir into dry mixture. 
All human desires for betterment, for enlighten- Fold in nut meats. Spread over top 
ment, for spiritual nourishment will be sternly suppressed and ground to 
dust beneath the iron heel of Naziism. 


of apples, making several cuts to 
‘« . . 


Serve warm, plain or with sweet 
cream. Six portions. Cheese makes 
as irrefutable and must be met squarely, if civilization is not to be over- | os 
whelmed and the world plunged into a black night which might last a} REFRIGERATOR PUMPKIN PIE 


| allow steam to escape. Bake 40 min- 
utes in a moderate oven (375 F.) 
To The Finish ae 
o a easing acc i i 
These are the facts which have to be faced. They must be recognized | rR aay ees oa ae 
thousand years. Great Britain has recognized the issue ‘fully and is now 1 tablespoon gelatin 
waging a gallant fight against these forces of darkness. Fortunately Can-| cup cold water 


ada is now awakening to a realization of the seriousness of the ‘struggle 1°? CUPS cnr pumpkin 
nd the test to which she is bei ie i ate 
a e tes which she is being subjected. There are growing signs that 2 tablespoons butter 
the United States. is becoming more and more keenly aware of the peril | 2 tablespoons molasses 
which is threatening from all sides. 1, cup sygar 

The day of wishful thinking. is long past. Hitler is implementing his 1 teaspoon ginger 
romise to wage an “all out” war. ‘The - 1 teaspoon cinnamon,  . 
Pp ag end justifies the miéans” is his doc % teaspoon salt ’ 


trine. As John W. Dafoe in an admirable contribution to the radio series | 
“Let's Face the Facts” ‘said: “Hitler and Mussolini, in their ideas personify | 
human nature at its most tigerish level. They cannot afford to leave the 
light of human freedom shining anywhere in the world. -For.them at least 
the world cannot continue half free and half slave. Therefore they wage 
war, world wide in its: purpose; and by a law of iron necessity this war must 
go on until it destroys every vestige of freedom in the world, or the dic- 
tatorships are themselvés consumed in the fires which they have ignited.” 

, With such a desperate issue facing them, there is.only one thing facing 
the yet unconquered democracies, and that is to put everything they possess | 
into the fight and to wage it to a finish. 


1 Rice Krispie Crumb Pie Shell 

Sprinkle gelatin-over cold water 
and allow to soften. Heat pumpkin, 
milk, butter and molasses together. 
Combine sugar, ginger, cinnamon and 
salt; add to pumpkin mixture. Add 
softened gelatin; mix thoroughly; 
cool. Pour into pie shell. Plaee pie in 
refrigerator for about one hour or 
until firm. enough to cut. 


Crumb Pie Shell 
1, cup butter, ‘4 cup sugar, 1 cup 
fine Kellogg's Rice Krispie crumbs. 
Melt butter in pie pan. Add sugar 


Russians Move To Cedea Territory | Silk Importations 
“Pravda, organ of the Communist| Of.the 15,854,552 pounds of raw 

party, said the other day that more/| Silk imported by the United States 

than 1,000 families were moving from | in the first half of this year 12,822,-' 4, j9-inch shell. Note: Roll or grind 

collective farms in Soviet Russia) 675 pounds came from Japan, 2,000,-| 3 cups Rice Krispies to yield 1 cup 

proper of settlements in the new|578 pounds from China and 1,523,-| fine crumbs. 

Karelian-Finnish republic, ceded to|®74 pounds from Italy. | 

Russia at the close of the Russian- 

Finnish war. “Pravda” said towns 

and villages devastated and depopu- 


mixture evenly and firmly around 
sides and bottom of ‘pan. Chill be- 
fore adding filling. Yield: One 8, 9 


| Ancient Manuscripis 
Elementary schools of London in| Egypt's priceless literary 
normal times, give employment . to! ures, more than 180,000 manuscripts 


lated by the war were being restored.| 19,101 persons, including 16,858) and ancient tomes, have been made 
, teachers. safe from air raids in a desert hill 

Before the war, scientists were ex- aaa f cave of secret location.. Some time 
ploding bombs in the ocean near To make tropical fish comfortable, | 88°, the treasures of Tut-Ankh- 


Bermuda, for the peaceful purpose|°! furnaces provide 70-degree warmth| amen and other Pharaohs were, 
of detecting nature of rock forma-,‘° * Florida aquarium during cooler | buried deep in the stone vaults of | 


tions in the depths. 


weather. the Cairo museum. 


Strawberries are said to have been| Some Romans of 100 B.C. had salt 
80 named because they were strung | water tanks at their villas, in which 
on broomstraw when carried to mar-| to hold oysiers fresh for banquets. 
ket, ! 


Keep coal in the dark, if possible. 
The cantaloupe is a member of the | Sunlight is likely to cause it to 
cucumber family. ee oo he a 


who says she) 


Already Miss Bourque has given a 
ability. 


| jot as law clerk in the department. | 


-London circles, 


/and crumbs; mix thoroughly. Press. 


treas- | 


ret oll pressure mato for 
ol 
ag Hetalls. Trade now. 


Mounting Charges 


Board Bill For Graf Spee Crew, 
Reaching Large Figures 
Argentina has marked up a 1,000,- 
000-peso board bill (about $327,500) 
against the Nazi government for en- 
tertaining since last December 1,000 
or more crewmen of the scuttled 
pocket battleship, Admiral Graf Spee. 

Despite this hospitality, 


have escaped from internment in 
Argentina, apparently in attempts to 
reach Germany. 

Attempted and successful escapes, | 
raising necessity for more guards and | 
costly searches, have added to the, 
expense Argentina, under the terms; 
of international law, must. bear until 
the end of the war. 

The Nazi seamen 
stocks of Argentina 


consumed huge 
foods 


so Argentina officials first appro- 
priated 500,400 pesos to meet costs of 
maintaining the crew. 


Under The Hague convention, Ger-| 
- many 


is responsible for these costs 
and she must settle with Argent | 


informed | 
sources said 19 officers and 60 sailors) 


after, 
weeks of cruising on limited supplies, ; 


A Nazi Error 
British Method Of Aerial Warfare 
More Pffective Than German ‘ 
Hitler's air-krieg against Britain 
failed to blitz because he personally 
chose the wrong method of aitack. 

Over-confident after his conquests 
accomplished by breaking the morale 
of Francé, Belgium, Holland, Den- 
mark and Norway, he thought he 
could win England by the same 
method. , 

- Enstead of picking out British’ air- 
plane faciories, for instance, and de-| 
voting two weeks of methodical at- 
tack, if necessary, for their destruc- 
tion one by one, he chose to con- 
| duct an air-fright campaign designed 
pr:marily to incite the people of Lon- 
don. to change its government for 
peace. It was the first mistake he 
made. 

Only two airplane factories in 
England have been put out of com- 
| mission by the Germans since the 
| Start of the war, and these were out 
only three to four weeks. You may 
accept the most authoritative word 
| poestbte here for that. 
| The British method of warfare 
| against Germany has been much 
more effective, although less ‘sensa- 
tional. They picked. out oil depots 
| and factories in the beginning and 
have bombed them systematically, 
avoidintg the kind of wastéd effort, 
| from a military standpoint, in which 
Hitler has indulged in London. 

This edge can be pressed by the 
British through the winter as Ger- 
{many is not protected by the fog 
| which usually. enshrouds England 
| during that season. 

By April British ‘plane produc- 
tion will have increased to the point 
| which should completely ‘free her 
from the danger of invasion.— Paul 
| Sfaiion in the Minneapolis Star Jour- 
nal. 


| 


Phonograph Returning 


The Sale Of Phonograph Records 
Increasing Of Late 

The phonograph is now said to be 

comeback. 


Nazis would find work and become’ Last year 4,000,000 records were sold 


self-supporting. A 
jobs and the strong temptation to 
escape defeated the plan. 


Trade Routes Open 


British Trade In The Meditérranean 
Is Increasing 

British trade with countries in the 
eastern Mediterranean is increasing 
daily as, the Royal Navy and Royal 
Air Force keep safe the sea 
through which merchant ships mus: 
pass. 


For a few weeks after Italy's en-| 


try into the war; traffic was inter- 
rupted and 


closed, bu:, according to authoritative 


proving day by day. 
Britain has: been buying “dried | 
fruit from Greece and Turkey, hemp! 


arid flax from the Balkans generally, | 


and a constant stream of cotton, cot- 
ton seed, cot.on seed cake, salt, 
phosphate of lime and onions has 
been coming from Egypt. 


From .Cyprus have come asbestos, | 
locust beans and! 
from Palestine Britain has been get- 
imports of|a record recently, when nine major 


iron pyrite and 


ing greatly increased 


potash. 


lack of suitablt| in the United States. 


lanes | 


the Mediterranean was} 


the position is im-| 


This year the 
number is es'imated to reach about 


“| 130,000,000. 


| The reason for such a tremendous 
; Jump in one yéar seems difficult to 
| ascertain, but there. are probably sev- 
eral causes. One is that there has 
been a great reduction in prices of 
records, classic as well as dance and 
crooning, and people have taken ad- 
van-age to buy records and make 
use of the hundreds of thousands, 
possibly million or two phonographs 
|which have been standing neglected 
jin a corner of the living-room, or 
| relegated to the attic. 

Another is that, after all, people 
like to be able to hear the tunes 
they like, and on the radio they have 
|to take what they ge:—not .what 
| they want.—-St. Thomas-Times Jour- 
nal. 


| Homogenized milk, in which the 
| fat globules are broken up and scat- 
tered, is manufactured by ‘cracking”’ 
whole milk under a pressure of 2,500 
pounds. 


Yellowstone's famous geysers broke 


geysers ‘spouted within one hour. 


the meant it. 


HEALTH 2a 
FLAVOUK 


The Spirit In Britain 


German _ Brutalities Result In 
Stiffening The Morale 


Perhaps the following may serve 
to illustrate the spirit in which those 
who have so terribly suffered ir re- 
cent air raids take their sufferings. 
I was visiting a large hospite! in 
which’ many air raid casualties from 
Southeast London have been re- 
ceived. 1 was with a father, a man 
about 40, whose child had just died. 
Another, seriously injured, was also 
in the hospital. While I was with 
him he received the news that his 
wife and remaining three children 
were also dead. When, a little later, 
before I left him, I asked what he 
was going to do, this was his reply— 
“Do? Why, join up to-morrow’— 
I do not think, Sir, that 
this is an isdblated case, but is rather 
typical of the spirit which the Ger- 
man brutalities are arousing, increas- 
ingly, in ali classes of the commu- 
nity.—Bishop Golding-Bird in the 
London Times. 


Express Thanks 


Italian Internees Are Grateful For 
Rescue By Canadian Destroyer 
Gratitude of Italian internees res- 
cued from the liner Arandora Star, 
sunk by an enemy submarine while 
on the way to Canada, has been 
officially conveyed to the officers and 
men of the Canadian destroyer St. 
Laurent, which took part in the res- 
cue, said Navy Minister Macdonald. 
The leader of the group of Italians 
who survived the sinking, sent his 
communication through the Brazilian 
ambassador in London who jis acting 
for the Italian government during 
the war. The message has now been 
passed to Commander H. G. DeWolf, 
officer commanding the St. Laurent. 


The King has presented the city of © 


London with four motor ambulances 
and eight mobile canteens. 


-SANI 


'| LIKE COLD 


Save left-overs 


CUTS? 


by wrapping with Dana pani SS 


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ST 


Tee Piles. xs, ALBERTA | 
liad disappeared with him, Nova’s| his suitcase at Calais or Havre, and 
were blandly ignorant. Nor could| the money would attract attention. 
they recognize the lady who had/ He might put it at the bottom of 
driven the rich Bradford mérchant to| the trunk and. register it through. | . 
Marlow and left him drugged and) But the thefts of baggage on the 
penniless in the long grass of the| French railways were notoriously 
meadows. | Frequent: He might, of course, 

In the afternoon the car came; the| travel by the Simplon Express or by’ 
chauffeur was a burly man with a| the Blue Train—hand baggage was 
black mustache who chewed gum and | subject to a peffunctory examina-| 
had no intertest in anybody's | Se on the train, and if. he ve 


ness but his own. (bound for Monte Carlo the carriage 

In this Mr. Blienbury drove to the| Of such wealth might be regarded 
bank; taking his two suitcases, and| #8 @n act of madness by thé customs 
went’ into the managet’s ‘room and Officials and excite no other com- 
checked the cable advices. ; ment. 

“Immense!” said the manager) But both the Simplon and the Ri- 
soberly. He referred to the total. viera Express are booked up at this 
“And more to come, I suppose? It) season of the year, and a compart- 


|is so big that it almost breaks loose) ment could not be secured by any” 


| from the standards.” | anoges. } 
| “Standards?” | There remained only one alterna- | 
| Mr. Bllenbury did not know what | tive. To carry half the money in 
he was talking about. | his trunk, distribute as much as he| 
“Right and wrong * * * like taking) could amongst his pockets, and post 

a foot rule to measure St. Paul's.” (the rest to himself at various hotels 


tician, could not resist the challenge.| this would be a long and tedious) 

“Moral conduct isn’t a matter of job. He went into the outer office) 

| arithmetic, but a matter of propor-| and brought back a packet of stout | 

|tion. You can't measure it with @ envelopes. He must not register) 

yardstick, but by its angle. Ten de- them—these Latin post offices made, 

|grees out of the perpendicular is 48 the collection of a registered letter | 
much a fault in a gatepost as in the| a fussy business. | p 

leaning Tower of Pisa. * * * I make, he 

The Par, Ie this American total’ a hundred and, CHAPTER XXIII. Htalian Humor’ 

twelve thousand.” - | 

“And ten,” added the manager.| 


With a Bradshaw by his side, he 
Lane Mystery |The exchangé is against us.” began his task. He kiana the Statement About The Axis 


| Mr. Elilenbury made five bundles of envelopes and went in search of Powers 


| Elienbury, something of a dialec- throughout France and Spain. And) 
' 
| 


the most humorous remark of the 


| 
suitcase. : ~ =| 
— of the requisite stoutness. Extin month, we would suggest as the re- 


“Now we will take the South suishing the lights, he went out to 


Serialized by Ledger Syndicate. |/ manager, painfully patient, a sigh in stock and came back. Halfway address before the diplomats and). itiout opposition. He was’ welcom-| 
ed there as a comrade-in-arms by 
| the governor-general. 


journalists. assembled to hear the) 
details of the German-Italian-Japa- 
nese pact, the count delivered an ad- 


- (his every sentence, oaapateve! iN through the second packet and with 
CHAPTER XXII.—Continued — every _wag of his penholder. “I SUP- the writing table piled with bulging’ 


pose you'e right, but it does seem to’ envelopes, he was writing: 


On the morning of that day he me that a man's offense against so- Hotel Reina Christina 
walked around his bedraggled de- ciety is in inverse ratio to the) Algent : ——s | 
mesne before going to the city. He ®mount of money he pouches.” es tis ; : eager These three powers have no in- 
had grown attached to Royalton “Pouches!” murmured Mr. Ellen+ en tnere bey a tap on the g so Naor of challenging or threaten- | 
House, he discovered, and almost bury in protest. — door and he nearly screamed jing anyone. . 
wished he could take it gvith him. It“ ‘Pockets,’ then. When you reach, ¥'th fright. A frequent rejoinder when any-: 


was ugly and dreary and depressing. the million mark you've got’ to a Two grave eyes. were watching one sets forth. a palpably false idea 


Even the vegetable garden seemed 
decayed. Pale ghosts of cabbages 
drooped like aged and mourning men 


jury. They look at the man and they; g@ve @ view into the office. Leaping terday?” Count Ciano, if he really 
look at the money, and they say ‘not to his feet, his teeth set in.a grin. of meant to be accepted seriously, must! 


amid the skeleton stalks of their de- guilty’ automatically. There ought to fear, he dragged open the door. assume that practically everyone in 
parted fellows: be a new set of laws dealing with (To Be Continued) the world came into being the day 
property—starting with penalties for |} before he. made that remark. The 


Across the desolation came the 
gardener, his shoulders protected 
from the drizzle by a sack. 

‘T've got a load of stuff to fill the 

: 7 And the jury should be made up of | ; 
pit,” he said. “Game yesterday. accountants and novelists, who've, To Greater Number Of People trite and have reformed, that while 

The pit was an eyesore and had |... seen real money, but think in| Dr. George F. Stevens, of Hos |in the wa to establish a new order 


pinching a million, and working up to Group H it alization | count, of course, knows that people 
, the place where you can indict @ gov- | P jhave memories, so perhaps he was 


| . . 
ernment for wasting nine figures. | | Striving to show that the three 
Properly Handled, Provides Benefits ;otalitarian powers have grown con- 


been for thirty years. It was @ deep). inions 87,900 1 make it.” | real, president of the Canadian Hos-|in the world they have decided to 
depression at the edge of the kitchen) 47. renbury performed a rapid) Pital Council, said that group hos-)accept the old order of Christian 

nm and Mr. a grey had cited) Jiculation, consulting the little pitalization schemes, properly han-| morality. Maybe he meant to put 
goad pcp wy pol pe gy oa ready reckoner which bank clerks | dled, provided benefits to many more|that idea across. He still deserves 
peo A sttnhing pot Wh 6 employ to find exchange values. | People than those immediately con-| the prize for the most humorous’ re- 
@habe-tided bed est’ teartle seate “Right,” he said. “You have cerned with hospitalization. He ad-| mark of the month.—Buffalo Courier- 
where, hidden from the vulgar eye queetiy perverted § principles, my| SORE. SHEER Of te SUMienne / Mnperes. 

: bs) friend. Whether a man steal 10, Wan Hospital Association at Regina. 


pe dposwagel al eo - cents or $5,000,000” | In addition to the relief of finan- : | im 
end of dreams—a pit to be filled. He “Bank of Yokohama’—the man- | “!@! stress on patients, hospitals and | GEMS OF THOUGHT | 
atoed on tho edge ef it. An unlovely | °S*? sorted his papers. “The yen | 20ctors, the public also benefited, he: 

. stated. Payment of accounts by) FRIENDS 


hole in the ground, the bottom cov-|'S at 1s. 8 5-16d.,. and it only seems! ‘ 
ered with aches, the rusty corner of yesterday that it was on the twenty- those participating in hospital) -wo: is a Friend? I will tell you. 


" schemes reduced the charity load vith whi da 
a petrol tin showing just above the four mark. Curious! Way down in It is a person with whom you dare 
pa di the bowels of the earth a ledge of ts tgs niga ordinarily bore! +, pe yourself—Frank Crane. 
; i ugh taxation. 
By the side was «heap of rubbish, "CCX* ‘lips over, © superheated| 


A resolution passed by the Hos-| Real friendship is a slow grower, 
aged bricks and portions of brick, | erage ae he hog vv pital Association approved the estab- and never thrives unless engrafted 
sand gravel, sheer ashpit emptyings. ° yy leas- 


f known and reciprocal 
! lishment of a group hospitalization “PO” @ stock o Pp 
“T will ail it in—I have promised | ree a nee po 7 pe Dyrage ned pool for the dependents of enlisted ™erit—Lord Chesterfield. 
myself that exercise,” said Mr. s ' & o the Acts : 


of God class—I'm giving you dollars ™¢™- It suggested that the scheme There are no greater miracles 
erage ——e for rg ace for this—U.S. Poh atts oP be operated by the Federal Govern- known to earth than perfection and 
hat by to-morrow he wou 


2 i d that the Government should an unbroken friedship.—Mary Baker 
Quite O.K.” said Mr. Elienbury, ™¢™t 4” > a 
oe more substantial than | necking the bundles that were ™#Ke deductions from dependents’ Raddy. 


handed to him. a allowances to establish a fund for h . be- 

The slimy hole held his eyes. If “1+ was growing dark when he car-| P@¥ing hospital bills. Reasnaganegy sptitie, pth decane es 

he could put Harlow there and SCC Lied out his suitcases and placed A. P. Donnelly, of Saskatoon, was spect, until, in their dialogue, each 

his big white face staring up from | them inside the car. They were very elected president of the association ph te én her the wiiaie  Guetdl —-ter- 
the mud—thet would be a good fill: heavy. It was strange how heavy, for the next year. piri , 


! 
a, |paper money could be—and how = : 
He felt his face and neck go red, |, ulky. Second Line Of Defence When friendship is settled, you 


his limbs tingling. Presently he tore) , _| must trust; before it is formed, you) 
himself away and walked back to the mA aoe = a nl oe al pnw Establishment In Canada Of British ™¥St pass judgment.—Seneca. 
house. The car that Ratas hired for) 015 nefore, when offered the choice | Industrial Plants | A man that hath friends must 
him was waiting—the driver bade |. .on a small suite on the ground! To-day a large proportion of the show himself friendly: and there is a 
him a civil good morning and: said floor and @ larger one on the first | new plants being built in Canada are friend that sticketh closer than a 
the weather was the worst he had) 4... 16 nad chosen the former. | British, The Financial Post says brother.—Proverbs 18:24. 
ever known. | He had sent his clerk home early. that two plants which were under 

Mr. Bllenbury went in to break-|1; was a Friday, and the man had construction in Britain have been| Granted Safe Passage 
fast without replying. The sight of | been given a fortnight’s holiday and abandoned and, instead, similar 

the car was suggestive. | had had his salary in advance. Open- plants. are being built here. , Italian Commander To World's Fair 
_ There was a garage known to Mr. | ing the oiiter door with his key, he| We are witnessing, in fact, the’. At New York To. Return Home 
Ellenbury where a car could be hired tugged the two suitcases into his establishment in Canada of Britain's The British Government has grant-| 
- ‘and no inconvenient questions asked.| private room. Here was a brand second line of industrial defence. Mr. eq safe passage back to Italy to Ad- 
Stated more clearly, there are many/new trunk and a passport. A few | King's prediction that. Canada would | miral Giuseppe Cantu, Italian Com- | 
people in London engaged in peculiar | weeks before Harlow had ordered him be the “arsenal of the Empire” missioner to tlie World's Fair, and. 
professions, to whom money wasnot/to procure a passport for a “Mr. sounded a little large at the time, ten members of his staff, together 
an important consideration. They | Jackson,” whose other name was but it is coming to pass.—Vancouver with their families\it was learned at! 
could not buy loyalty, but they were Ingle. Ellenbury had a distaste for | Sun. the British Embassy. The step was| 
willing to pay for discretion. ‘|the petty frauds of life, but as usual —— taken, it was explained, as an act | 

Nova’s Garage had a tariff that | he had obeyed and duplicated the: — Warning To Democracies of courtesy to the United States. 
was considerably higher than any offense by applying for a second) after the next victorious war, we since the Italians’ presence in Am-| 
other, but the extra cost was money | passport, forwarding a photograph! must strike the conquered foe so erica was due to an invitation ex-| 
well spent. For when the police came|of himself taken 20 years before! mercilessly that his spirit and the tended to them by the United States 
to Nova’s to learn who was the) and using a name which had not the! spirit of his children will be crushed| Government, before Italy entered 
foreign-looking gentleman who had faintest resemblance to his own. | for generations. “No conquered foe the Buropean war. It was under- | 
driven away from a West End jewel-| He sat down with the two bulging | must ever again dare to look a Ger-| Stood that the State Department in-| 
grips before him and with a feeling’ man in the face as an equal. He|tervened on behalf of the stranded 
of unease. ‘Not that his! must recoghize him as an overlord.” | Italians. It was made clear that fu- 


| to him at all, was @ relief to his dis-|the world’s greatest. a eee 


ae, wine tnt the eh eer In © resent Dow York survey bet: | veut ip @ yall on. wilel h 


; General Charles de Gaulle’s first) 
By Edgar Wallace | the notes and fitted them into the ' another packet, but could find none | If someong should offer a prize for attempt to raliy France's colonies to| 
his anti-Nazi,- anti-Vichy standard) 

; ended in failure at Dakar. His sec-| 
Copyright, by Edgar Wallace. American remittances,” said the’, neighboring store, replenished his cipient Count Ciano of Italy. In bis| 514 in the Cameroons, has succeeded |@24 one French Nations), received a 


| dress, in which he made this startling! (ure But the landing at Duala number of their families. For three 


| was made memorable by other than 
| its status as a significant chapter of 
| Free France’s fight against Hitler. . 
' De Gaulle made it so by his response|" It is from farming and ranchnig 


to the official welcome: 


point beyond the comprehension of a, him through the oval of glass that|is: “Do you think I was born yes- exdimple already, followed by a num- éxcept one, are British subjects. 


ber of colonies, and others will fol- 
low. I cite Hitler's words in ‘Mein : . 
Kampf’ that a people may be beaten | ‘8h peoples throughout. the world hin 
but when a people and their leaders 
accept defeat then they are forever 
lost. On the contrary, if a handful| Tit expenses on the trip to Canada 
of men do not accept defeat then! 
everything is to be hoped for.” | eu 

‘The quotation from Hitler was apt; | 


the interpretation was an inspiration. | 
De Gauille’s was the voice of France| ‘heir prospects of passing the string- . 


speaking — the France of lberty,| ©St medipal tests for admission to the 
equality and fraternity, opposing the 
subjugated France of Adolf Hitler. 


that is well worthy of. consideration | pec. 
by those who feel they are getting 

a wee bit old: A friend of mine well . On Night Diity 

on in life visited an old crony in his}' Members of a number of London 
former home town. . While remin-| business houses have volunteered to 
iscing, my friend remarked to the! stay on duty during the night to 
other, “Joe, we are getting old.”| guard against fire. A janitor stum- 
“Well,” was the reply, “I'm glad of bled over @ slumbering form in @ 
that.” “Glad!” exclaimed the other, | 

“what do you mean?” “Why shouldn'’t/ sleeper by tickling his feet—and got 
I be glad,” said Joe, “if I wasn’t get: the shock of his life he 
ting old I'd be dead, wouldn’t 1?”—)| he had wakened 6ne of the firm's A 
Shelburne Free Press and. Economist. | directors. : 


enough money for a college educa-' pearances of Halley’s comet in a 
tion, but making the foo.ball team | lifetime. It appears once every 75 to 
is something he has to do for him-|77 years. Last visible. in 1910, it 
self. again will appear in 1985.. 


The customs officials would search| in every home. simulated. 2383 


oe 


| ,, . 
'Count Ciano. Makes Remarkable Gen pe Gaulle Is Confident Cause Sixteen British Youths And One 


Is Not Lost French National To Join Cana- 
: dian Air Force - : F 
After travelling all the way from ~ a 
Argentina to enlist in the Royal : 
Canadian Air Force 16 British youths 


friendly greeting from James 8. Dun- 
| can, deputy minister for air, recently. 

Receiving the youths in his office 
What lies ahead for De Gaulle is| Mt. Duncan found out he knew @ 
years he worked in Buenos Aires and 
came in contact with many. farmers 
and ranchers. ? 


families of British origin that these 
“Cameroon has set a magnificent would-be airmen come. All of them 
. Mr. Duncan said it was an illus: 
‘tration of the ‘solidarity of the Bri- 


| that these young men should offer 
their services in a time of crisis. 


-|were paid by @ committee of British 
jects in Argentina. wot 

| Prior to leaving they underwent a 
medical examination to determine 


air force. As soon as they receive 

|a medical examination at Ottawa « 

| those who pass will be shipped off to . 

‘the air force manning depot at To- 
Getting G88 |ronto, except for the French mem- 

A Toronto friend tells. this one, | per of the party, who will go to Que- 


corner one morning and roused the 


You can supply your boy with! It is possible to see only two ap- 


By a special ruling of the Post Office 
Dept.. YOUR PERSONAL 
avomeunes are pte 
inches in d #1 in 
dep Way BE SENT WITH 
YOUR OVERSEAS gift parcel. 


Work Shirts Values 


‘That are Outstanding 


MEN’S PLAID SHIRTS 
These Scoteh plaid. 
taking on this year. 


prised at its sturdy weight and 
strength. SPEQIAL ; 


G.W.G. DOESKIN oe 
brown, with contrastin 
Man. Selling at ’ 


therns are really 
mart, colorful pat- 
‘terns, and the cloth; well you will be sur- 


1.75 


Double doeskin by G.W.G. Green, blue, 

check patterns. 

A good heavy shirt for the ovtdoor 2 00 
. 


WOOD'S DOESKIN 

A special from this 
good. men’s shirt fae- 
tory. Heavy, please 
note, HEAVY, Caha- 
dian doeskin. Beauti- 
fully made through- 
out. Full yoke, good 
collars. A regular $2 
value. On 


~ Special Sale at 1.50 


Falcon Blankets 


Smart check patterns in medium 
ette. White ground with nice check in 


ght flannel- 
ue, 


uc, green, 
mauve, etc. Good blankets 70 x 80. SPECIAL— 


HEAVY WHITE BLANKETS 

Made from the heavy weight white 
flannelette. Good strong base yarns, 
covered with a fleecy nap. Whipped 
singly. Pure white for easy 2 7 
washing. Size 70 x 90. Special “* 


SKI CAPS 

Made by Eastern, a leading cap 
house. You are assured of good fit, 
good material. Come in blanket cloth 
or melton. Good full ear covers. They 
are smartly trimmed. Black, brown, 


green or red. 
SPECIAL AT 


Wool 


Paton and Baldwin's Scotch fin- 
gering. Probably your last chance 
‘to get this fanious English yarn at 


this low price.— 50c 


V/, lb. Skein 


HORSEHIDE Jacket 

Made from glove leath- 
er horsehide. Soft as 
chamois. Windproof & 
water repellant. May be 
sponged clean with good 
soap and water. Abso- 
lutely will not peel or 
chip: Neat military col- 
Jar, slide front. Neat 
yoke, 6 pleat back. In 
shades of brown, green, 


t, tan. A 
$17 coat for... 13.95 


TOMATOES 


Choice quality heavy pack, 21/’s, 2 for... 


CHEESE 
Kraft or Velveeta, 2 pound block 


SANDWICH SPREAD 


For school lunches or parties, 16 oz. size 


MALKINS PURE JAM 
Greengage or Damson, 4 pound tin 


AYLMER SOUP 


Tomato or vegetable, 1014 oz., 3 for... 


WINDSOR TABLE SALT 
14 pound bag for 


UALITY COFFEE 
esh ground, 1 pound for 


ROWNTREES COCOA, New Low Price 


Half 


Po und c One 


pound 


$2.25 


GREY WOOL BLANKETS 
Warm wool blankets for your bed. 


Soft, fleecy wool in a pleasing grey- 


blue shade. 
are lovely appearing, good wool 
blankets. Special at, each 


Whipped singly. These 


3.75 


PARKAS 

Popular, smart, warm. These new 
oi have appeal for the big or the 
ittle miss. A nice assortment to choose 
from. They come in knit wool, melton, 
angora, or astrakan and are’ 3.00 


trimmed and in bright to’ 
shades. Priced from 69c 2. 


Towelling 


_ New English arrivals. Heavy thirs- 
ty towelling with unequalled ab- 
sorbency. Natural shade. Waffle 
finish. Red or blue stripe. Full. 16”. 


Per Yard 40c 


WINNER or VICTORY JACKET 


These are outstanding value. Made 
from 28 oz. all wool Canadian mel- 
ton. The same cloth from which 
warm heavy ulsters are made. Slide 
front, 2 pleat easy-sway back, dee 

collar, adjustable waist. There is 
@ saving at this price. New lot just 
36-44 in. Navy blue. 46 up 


5.95 _. 6.95 


DOESKIN JACKET 


’ A big assortment of jackets made 

* from Canadian doeskin. Soft, and 
warm. Long wearing, neat in ap- 
pearance, Slide front 


Sotne 


CANADIAN 


APPLES 


: AA 
NG 


YS", 
= 


= 

+ _— 

CAT 
iso 


cy Snow, or fancy Jona- 
aa. At— 


$1.69 


35¢ 


J.C. McFARLAND 


Mr. W. EB. Walker is spending the 
winter with relatives at Bilby, Alta. 

(Mr. tA. C. Milne, Inna agent for the 
United Grain Growers Litd., received 
a telegram this morning, Wednesday, 
Nov. 18th, that the wheat quota for 
the Irma district had been raised to 
ten bushels. 

The show was cleared off the Irma 
rink and flooding started on Tuesday 
Nov. 12th. 

Miss Aletha Knudson student at the 
Normal school, Edmonton, spent last 
week end at her home. 

Mr. Oharles W. Lattner accompa- 
nied by his daughter Agnes, and two 
sons George and William, left for 
Kitchener, Ontario, on Saturday, 
Nov. 9th, where they intend to make 
their home. 

(Mrs. ‘Longmire spent last week 
end in Edmonton. 

Messrs. M. Mikkelson and Percy 
Webber have gone out west of Ed- 
monton to work in a lumber camp 
for the winter. 

Mrs. Pendleton moved into Irma 


m | last Tuesday and is occupying the 


house vacated by R. L. Martin. 

Mr. Jas Stead and family have mov: 
ed into the Yeend house for the 
winter. ; 

Messrs. Floyd and Roy Fuder have 
both secured positions with Edmonton 
| business firms, 
| The next meeting of the St. Ma- 
ry’s W.A. will be held on Tuesday, 
Nov. 19th at the home of Mrs. E.W. 
Peterson at 2:30 pm. Mrs. Milburn 
will be the hostess. Will all members 
who have any social service work 
kindly bring it to this meeting as 
we hope to send a bale to head- 
quarters in the near future. Any 
| used clothing would be gratefully ac- 
cepted for this work. 

The W-A. had a very successful 
tea last Saturday. Thank you all for 
your generous support and help, also 
Mr. E. W. Peterson for the use of 
his office. ; 

Mr. and Mrs. E. L. Elford motored 
to Calgary last Sunday for a short 
visit. 

‘Miss Ruth Reeds spent last week 
end at her home in Irma. 


Miss E. K. Stewart, Irma school! 


teacher spent the long week end at 
her home in north Edmonton. 


| WOMENS INSTITUTE 
ANNUAL BAZAAR 


The annua] bazaar wil] be held in 
‘Hedley’s -hall on Saturday, Nov. 
80th. There will be-a table of useful 
gifts and sewing table, also a table of 
novelties and bkindcraft articles. 

Tea will be served during the after- 
noon with home cooking and candy 
on sale. The usual raffle will be held 
lst prize to be a pair of flanellette 
sheets, 2nd prize auto rug, 3rd prize 
table cloth and some other prizes 
will be donated. Tickets for raffle 
can be bought from any Institute 
member. Please keep this in mind 
and help the good work of the Wo- 
mens Institute. 

The monthly meeting of the Irma 
‘W.I. was held in Hedleys hal] on! 
Thursday, Nov. 7th. Mrs. J. Fletcher | 
president was in the chair. Roll call 
was followed by new ideas for the 
bazaar. The members decided to take 
|@ correspondence course on new fur- 
nishing for old, from the Dept. of 
Agriculture, extension service. 

Plans made for the annual bazaar 
to be held on Saturday, Nov. 30th. 
A very fine paper was given by Mrs. 
P. Webber on “Handicraft”, 


t| What Air Waves Are 


Saying Over CJCA 


BING COMES BACK 
King Croon Crosby returns to the 
Music Hall November 21—and what 


H1;@ welcome he’ll get from CJCA fans 
|| Who he 


ve written, telephoned and 
called in person to find out what’s 
been delaying him. Furthermore, 
ihe comes back to a show that will 
‘be revamped ito present less talk and 
more music. Fuffhermore, (Connie 
‘Boswell joins the show November 14. 
Furthermore, a dramatic insert will 
be featured weekly. and we could go 
on “Furthermoring” almost endles- 
ly, But why bother? Bing’s 
coming back—and that’s what really 
meaitters. 


“I can foresee the necessity for 
women pilots as couriers during a war 
to releage the nation’s manpower for 


soda 


# che ec ore™ 
o. a7 ‘ 


N. BAWLF GRAIN OO. SOLD 
TO ALBERTA PACIFIC 
(Winnipeg, Nov. 7—Ghareholders 
of N. Bawlf Grain Company Limited 
today approved sale of the compa- 
ny’s assets to the Alberta Pacific 
Grain Company Limited for $1,000,- 
000 cash. The Alberta Pacific under 


the terms of the offer assumes li- to 


abilities of the Bawlf Company in- 
cluding a mortgage of $205,000 on 
the Bawlf terminal elevator at Port 
Arthur. ; 

Of the preference shares represent- 
ed at the meeting 11,505 voted in 
favor of the sale of the Company’s 
assets and 157 voted against the sale. 

The Bawif ‘Company owns 180 coun- 
try elevators and a terminal eleva- 
tor at Port Arthur. Acquiring the 
‘Bawlf assets will give the Alberta Pa- 
cific a terminal at the head of the 
Great Lakes as well as at Vancou- 
ver 


FOR SALE—Northwest Quarter of 
Section 1, Twp. 45, Range 9, west of 
4th M. 160 acres, small granary, 
fenced, etc., $1680.00; $480.00 cash, 
balance arranged with interest at 8 
percent per annum. Appy A. H. 
ALLAN, Apt. 8 - 340 Metcalfe St., 
Ottawa, Ont. Sep. 18, Nv 15c 


piloting fighters and bomber.”—Miss 


Jacqueline Cochran. 
>. ¢ # 


“Hoarding money or any other com- 


a 


oi’ 
eet bot 


irma Times 
Published every Friday by the Times. 
Alberta. 


E. W. CARTER, Local Editon 
Advertising Rates ’ 
Want Ads., per insertion .............. 85: 
Ytray or Strayed, 8 issues for .... $1.00: 
Card of Thanks ..............1..ccscoscers my ~ 


ec ARNE AERA EE ET LE A 

Why spend a lot of valuable time- 
hunting for your stray animals when 
a small want. ad in this paper will 
locate them for you nine times out. 
of ten? 


Professional Cards 


DR. 8. L. CALDWELL 


' Dentist, of Viking 
will be in the IRMA DRUG STORB 


At Irma every second and fourth 
Friday of each month. 


Se 


C. GREENBERG, M. D. 
Physician and Surgeon 
Phone 40 

Irma e - 


IRMA LODGE No, 56 


Meets First and Third Tuesday 
in each month 
at 8 p.m., in the 1.0.0.F,. Hall 
Visting Brothers Always Welcome 


Wor. Master .................... R. H, Stone 
Ree. Secretary ...........dames Stead’ 
4 Visiting Orangemen Always Welcome